This  article is an absolute gem. Phil Hammond writes with such  

devastating clarity. This abomination of a court has gone too far  

this time!

  _____  

Wednesday 13 May 2009


The Hague: a tool of ‘legal vengeance’


ESSAY: The ICTY’s Kafkaesque decision to bump up a prisoners’ sentence by 12 
years shows that it is nothing like a proper court of law.
Philip Hammond 

Imagine that you are convicted of a crime and sentenced to five years’ 
imprisonment. But, just as you are about to finish serving your time, the court 
decides that its original verdict wasn’t harsh enough and sends you back to 
prison for a further 12 years. 

It’s the sort of nightmarish thing you might think could happen only in a 
totalitarian regime. Yet it happened last week at the International Criminal 
Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague, a court fêted by its 
supporters as a model of international justice. 

The target of the ICTY’s Kafkaesque brand of ‘justice’ was Veselin 
Šljivančanin, a former officer in the Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA), who was 
originally convicted in September 2007 of ‘aiding and abetting torture’ during 
Croatia’s war of secession from the federal Yugoslav state in 1991. At the time 
of his conviction, Šljivančanin had already been in the ICTY’s custody for more 
than four years. He was released at the end of 2007, pending appeal. But last 
week the ICTY’s Appeals Chamber overturned his original five-year sentence and 
imposed a 17-year term of imprisonment, while dismissing all counts of appeal 
entered by Šljivančanin and his co-defendant and former superior officer, Mile 
Mrkšić. 

The Appeals Chamber’s decision was not based on any new facts. No fresh 
evidence was brought to light to challenge the original verdict. The Appeals 
judges themselves noted that the 2007 judgement ‘did not err in its factual 
findings’. Nevertheless, a majority of them (with two out of five judges 
dissenting) agreed with the prosecutor that ‘a five years’ imprisonment 
sentence does not adequately reflect the level of gravity of the crimes’ (1). 

The ICTY gave two key reasons for its new sentence. First, it argued that 
Šljivančanin had been wrongly acquitted at his original trial of aiding and 
abetting murder. On the basis of nothing more than the record of its own trial 
acquitting him of this charge, the ICTY now found him guilty. Second, it 
asserted that the five-year term imposed in 2007 – for aiding and abetting 
torture – had to be revised because it was not clear whether the judges had 
given sufficient weight to the suffering of the victims and their families. 
Both of these spurious arguments reveal more about the tribunal’s flaws than 
about Šljivančanin’s culpability. 


The ‘hospital massacre’


Šljivančanin’s case concerns what is often – sensationally and misleadingly – 
referred to as the Vukovar ‘hospital massacre’. You might imagine him marauding 
through wards attacking doctors and patients. Over the years, that is what many 
journalists and commentators have imagined. In the Observer, for example, Tim 
Judah described how ‘Yugoslav army commanders went into the hospital and 
dragged out 200 of the wounded and hospital staff… beat them and shot them 
dead’ (2). In the Telegraph, Julius Strauss wrote that Serbian forces ‘took 
nearly 300 wounded from the hospital and executed them’ (3). Such ‘reports’ 
bear little resemblance to what happened back in 1991. 

After prolonged fighting, Croatian forces surrendered the city of Vukovar to 
the Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA), on 18 November 1991. The JNA took prisoners 
of war to the nearby village of Ovčara and kept them there overnight before 
transferring them to a POW facility at Sremska Mitrovica in Serbia, where they 
were to be held with a view to arranging a future prisoner-exchange with 
Croatia. 

Some Croatian fighters, however, had taken refuge in the city’s hospital, 
hoping to be evacuated along with its civilian occupants to Croatian-held 
territory. On 20 November the JNA apprehended those in the hospital whom they 
suspected of being enemy combatants – over 200 men and two women – and took 
them to the local barracks. Contrary to what was often claimed in media reports 
after the event, these were not civilians seized on a pretext. The ICTY itself 
accepts that ‘the evidence reveals that at least the vast majority of them, if 
not all, had been involved in Croat military formations active in the fighting 
at Vukovar’ (4). 

The original intention was evidently to send them to Sremska Mitrovica like the 
earlier group of POWs. But Serbian paramilitaries and local Territorial Defence 
men were out for revenge. The local Serbian civil authorities – an ad hoc 
government formed in opposition to Croatia’s nationalist regime – were also 
unhappy about prisoners being transported out of the area. The prisoners were 
instead sent to the site at Ovčara used the previous day. 

There, the POWs were severely beaten by the local Territorial Defence and 
paramilitaries. The JNA military police who had been sent to guard the 
prisoners made what the ICTY called ‘inconsistent and insufficient’ efforts to 
protect them from abuse. That evening, Mrkšić ordered the withdrawal of JNA 
troops from Ovčara. This left the prisoners at the mercy of the local 
Territorial Defence and paramilitaries, who subsequently took the revenge they 
had been waiting for and massacred them. 

Neither Šljivančanin nor Mrkšić ordered, participated in, or was even present 
at the killing of prisoners. The charge of aiding and abetting murder – for 
which Šljivančanin was acquitted in 2007, but of which both men are now thought 
guilty by the ICTY – hinges on Mrkšić ordering the withdrawal of JNA personnel 
from Ovčara and Šljivančanin failing to disobey that order. In extending 
Šljivančanin’s sentence, the Appeals Chamber found that, ‘even though [he] no 
longer had de jure authority over the military police deployed at Ovčara, he 
could have informed [them] that Mr Mrkšić’s order was in breach of the 
overriding obligation under the laws and customs of war to protect the 
prisoners of war’ (5). 

It is worth emphasising that this crucial decision was based, not on any new 
information or evidence, but simply on re-reading the trial record from 2007 
when Šljivančanin had been acquitted of aiding and abetting murder. As one of 
the dissenting Appeals judges, Fausto Pocar, observed, the Appeals Chamber has 
made ‘a conviction based on the trial record without having observed the 
witness testimony or the presentation of evidence, factors which may be 
particularly important in assessing witness credibility’. Noting the past 
‘inconsistent’ practice and ‘oscillating jurisprudence’ of the Appeals Chamber, 
Pocar also disputed whether it even had the authority under its own rules to 
enter new convictions or impose longer sentences. 

The other dissenting judge, Andrésia Vaz, went even further, pointing out that 
the new judgement was based on ‘speculative suggestions as to what Šljivančanin 
should or could have done to prevent the crimes’. In particular, the Appeals 
Chamber’s verdict hangs on the assertion that Šljivančanin could and should 
have acted after he learned about the decision to withdraw the military police 
from Ovčara, but does not establish when he learned about it. Complaining of a 
‘lack of precision’ and an absence of ‘clear evidence’, Vaz doubted whether 
Šljivančanin had either the opportunity or the means to prevent the murders, 
and concluded that the prosecution had therefore ‘far from [succeeded] in 
eliminating “all reasonable doubt”’ as to his guilt (6). 

The Appeals Chamber has substantially increased Šljivančanin’s sentence despite 
the protestations of one of its own judges that it lacks the power to do so. 
And one of its key justifications for this decision is that Šljivančanin 
committed a crime of omission, of which he was previously acquitted, by failing 
to prevent murders carried out in his absence by people not under his command. 
As Judge Vaz put it, this decision violates the ‘fundamental principle of 
criminal law’ that ‘where there is doubt, there can be no conviction entered’. 


A hierarchy of victimhood


The charge on which Šljivančanin was found guilty in 2007 was another crime of 
omission: aiding and abetting torture by failing to ensure that, when JNA 
personnel were still at Ovčara, they protected the prisoners from abuse at the 
hands of the Territorial Defence and paramilitaries. 

Media reports of last week’s verdict have often noted that public opinion in 
Croatia was very critical of Šljivančanin’s original five-year sentence for 
this crime as too lenient (7). The Appeals Chamber seemed to acknowledge this 
in explaining why the sentence now needed to be more than tripled, emphasising 
that it was unclear whether the original judgement had ‘weighed the 
consequences of the torture upon the victims and their families, or whether or 
to what extent it considered the particular vulnerability of the prisoners, in 
the determination of Mr Šljivančanin’s sentence’ (8). 

This is such a specious argument it defies belief. First, it is obvious that 
that original judgment did take account of the suffering of victims – by 
noting, for example, that ‘close family members have been left without their 
loved ones. In almost all cases the anguish and hurt of such tragedy has been 
aggravated by uncertainty about the fate which befell these victims.’ (9) 
According to the Appeals Chamber, such statements at the 2007 trial did not 
constitute full enough consideration of victims’ suffering. Apparently, the 
‘correct’ level of consideration could only have led to a 17-year sentence. 

Second, it is clear from the ICTY’s track record that some victims do not count 
as much as others. In 2006, for example, the ICTY convicted Bosnian Muslim 
commander Naser Orić of failing to prevent the ill-treatment and murder of 
Serbian prisoners by men under his command. The sentence? Two years. Since he 
had already been detained for longer than that during the trial, he was 
immediately released. Last summer, Orić’s case also went to the Appeals 
Chamber, which promptly overturned the conviction and acquitted him. Orić 
became notorious for murdering Serb civilians during the Bosnian war: he even 
made bizarre snuff videos as trophies and showed them to journalists as he 
boasted about his exploits (10). In his case, however, the victims seem to have 
weighed hardly at all in the deliberations of the court. 

It is worth asking why, as the ICTY puts it, there were such ‘intense feelings 
of animosity harboured by the Serb Territorial Defence and paramilitary forces 
against members of the Croat forces’ in Vukovar. This question is seldom asked, 
probably because the evil of the Serbs is simply assumed. Yet it was not just 
the pent-up anger and tension generated by weeks of fighting that sealed the 
fate of the Croatian POWs at Ovčara, but the long-standing grievances of local 
Serbs. As one reporter noted in 1999, ‘Before the war, Vukovar was one of the 
most ethnically integrated cities in Croatia… But the relative harmony that 
prevailed here since World War II was upset in the late 1980s by an outburst of 
Croatian nationalism.’ (11) This article was a rare exception to the general 
trend, which is to ignore or deny the plight of Serbs under Croatian 
nationalist rule. 

Long prior to the battle of Vukovar – certainly since the election of Croatia’s 
nationalist leader Franjo Tudjman in spring 1990 – Serbs in Croatia had become 
an increasingly persecuted minority, sacked from their jobs, driven out of 
their homes, attacked and killed. Even before the outbreak of war, 20,000 Serbs 
had fled Croatia (12). Tudjman’s government revived the symbols of Croatia’s 
fascist Second World War regime, which had exterminated Serbs along with Jews, 
Gypsies and other ‘undesirables’. To ethnic Serbs in Croatia, there was plenty 
of evidence to suggest that they were once again becoming ‘unpersons’. 

The ICTY has always claimed to act on behalf of victims. ‘For us the victims 
are the most important’, said chief prosecutor Richard Goldstone 1996: ‘The 
victims of the Yugoslav war want legal vengeance.’ (13) The tribunal emphasises 
its advocacy for victims because it stands outside the societies to which it 
applies its ‘international law’. Lacking any real connection with the people 
over whom it sits in judgement, the claim to speak for victims is a way to 
assert its legitimacy. Yet it is difficult to see how a mission of ‘legal 
vengeance’ is compatible with dispensing impartial justice. In practice, it 
leads to double standards and politicised judgements. 


A political tool


Michael Scharf, a lawyer who helped to write the original ICTY statute for the 
US State Department, has acknowledged that ‘the tribunal was widely perceived 
within the [US] government as little more than a public relations device and as 
a potentially useful policy tool’. The tribunal’s usefulness in this regard was 
demonstrated most vividly during the 1999 Kosovo conflict, when it indicted 
Serbian president Slobodan Milošević at the very moment when NATO was bombing 
his country. For the British and American governments, Scharf observed, the 
ICTY was ‘a useful tool in their efforts to demonise the Serbian leader and 
maintain public support for NATO’s bombing campaign’ (14). 

>From the outset, the ICTY has been fundamentally shaped by a simplistic, 
>good-vs-evil narrative of the Yugoslav wars, perpetuated by Western 
>politicians and the media. The ‘hospital massacre’ was one of the key events 
>in establishing that narrative, and was one of the main events highlighted by 
>the US State Department in 1992 when it first suggested that Milošević should 
>be indicted for war crimes (15). 

In 1999 it was raised again by those seeking to promote the argument that 
Milošević should be indicted. Prominent British human rights lawyer Geoffrey 
Robertson claimed to know of ‘compelling evidence that he personally approved 
the massacre of 200 patients at Vukovar hospital’ (16). Once the indictment had 
been issued, Robertson was beside himself, urging that Milošević should also be 
‘charged with ordering the Vukovar hospital massacre in 1991, when his army 
machine-gunned 260 Croatian patients, doctors and nurses into a mass grave’ 
(17). This scenario existed only in Robertson’s imagination. The beating and 
execution of prisoners of war is surely bad enough. Yet advocates of 
‘international justice’ often appear driven to ladle on the horror in order to 
sustain their own fantasies of righteousness. 

One key rationale often given for the existence of the ICTY is that the states 
involved in the Yugoslav wars would be incapable of holding the guilty to 
account themselves. Yet more than a dozen of those who – unlike Šljivančanin 
and Mrkšić – were directly involved in the mistreatment and murder of POWs at 
Ovčara have been convicted and sent to prison by Serbian courts. The ICTY, 
meanwhile, pursues its peculiar, politicised ‘legal vengeance’, supposedly on 
behalf of selected, ‘worthy’ victims. 

In reality, the ICTY serves no useful purpose except as a political tool of its 
Western sponsors. In common with other international tribunals, as it sits in 
judgement on other people’s wars it allows Western leaders to set themselves up 
as morally superior to weaker states, including those they bomb. 

Philip Hammond is reader in media and communications at London South Bank 
University, and is the author of Media, War and Postmodernity, published by 
Routledge in 2007 (Buy this book from Amazon(UK) 
<http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0415374944/spiked> ). 

(1) Appeals Chamber <http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/acjug/en/090505.pdf>  
Judgement, 5 May 2009 (pdf) 

(2) This war <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/1998/oct/04/warcrimes.balkans>  
criminal must be brought to justice, Tim Judah, Observer, 4 October 1998 

(3) Massacre 
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1312900/Massacre-that-started-long-haul-to-justice.html>
  that started long haul to justice, Julius Strauss, Daily Telegraph, 30 June 
2001 

(4) Trial Chamber <http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/tjug/en/070927.pdf>  
Judgement, 27 September 2007 (pdf). The judgement also notes that ‘the two 
Croat women included with the men were also thought by the JNA to have been 
involved in the Croatian forces’ 

(5) Appeals 
<http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/acjug/en/appeals_judgement_summary_090505.pdf>
  Chamber Judgement Summary, 5 May 2009 (pdf) 

(6) Appeals Chamber <http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/acjug/en/090505.pdf>  
Judgement, 5 May 2009 (pdf) 

(7) See, for example Hague triples 
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8033635.stm>  Vukovar jail term, BBC 
News, 5 May 2009 

(8) Appeals 
<http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/acjug/en/appeals_judgement_summary_090505.pdf%20>
  Chamber Judgement Summary, 5 May 2009 (pdf) 

(9) Trial Chamber <http://www.icty.org/x/cases/mrksic/tjug/en/070927.pdf>  
Judgement, 27 September 2007 (pdf) 

(10) ‘Weapons, cash and chaos lend clout to Srebrenica’s tough guy’, John 
Pomfret, Washington Post, 16 February 1994 

(11) ‘In the Misery of Vukovar Lies an Awful Model for Postwar Kosovo’, Blaine 
Harden, International Herald Tribune, 3—4 April 1999 

(12) ‘A Brief History of Ethnic Cleansing’, by Andrew Bell-Fialkoff, Foreign 
Affairs, Vol. 72, No. 3, 1993, p118 

(13) Quoted in Fools’ Crusade, by Diana Johnstone, Pluto Press, 2002, p96 

(14) Indicted 
<http://www.publicinternationallaw.org/publications/editorials/Then%20What.htm> 
 for war crimes, then what?, Michael Scharf, Washington Post, 3 October 1999 

(15) Michael Evans and Jamie Dettmer, US wants Serbia war crimes trials, The 
Times, 17 December 1992 

(16) ‘Should Milosevic be indicted as a war criminal?’, Geoffrey Robertson, 
Guardian, 6 April 1999 

(17) ‘No right without wrong, no peace without justice’, Geoffrey Robertson, 
Independent on Sunday, 30 May 1999 

reprinted from: http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/6657/

 

reprinted from: http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/ 

6657/

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